Finally, after an untold number of resets and a lengthy hiatus, I am back to working on a conlang. This conlang is for a race of angels in a story I want to write, but I need to have the conlang at least started to begin writing.

The angels are humans that, through the power of their gods, are revived, their bodies restored and empowered. Since they have human bodies, they are restricted to human sounds. In addition, their language is simplified, so that it only has 6 consonantal sounds and 3 vowels.

Two additional things I'd like to mention, this is only one of four languages that I need for the story, and I know it seems like I ask questions and leave, but that's because I keep starting and hating what I'm doing, and then I start again. So ech.

The parenthesis around the V in (C(V)-ʃ-V) is to show that if you can use the vowel without the consonant, but you can't use the consonant without the vowel. Also, if you use the vowel, you need to use the ʃ-V after it before using the CV.

Incidentally, I've changed the structure to (C(V)-ʃ-V)CVC(VC) with a vowel at the end to show gender.

Another question I've got, and it's more of a stylistic thing than anything, but how should I separate affixes from the main word so that the, let's say noun, isn't obscured? Like, so that I can still see its gender.

Let's say that the base of the word is šen, meaning person. I add an e to the end to give it the gender of Divine. Or, I can add an a to give it the gender of Evil, or a U, to give it the gender of Mortal. Then I wanted to give it an affix to make it male, and I did an agglutinative morphology with gender at the end, it'd be šen-affix-u, and it'd mean man?